
I could sit fireside and baste until sundown," she writes.īut when she was 13, Gabrielle's parents divorced spectacularly.

I have chronic summer time yearning to build large fires outdoors and slowly roast whole animals. I have clung to it for 30 yeas, that smell. "All day long as we did our chores, the smell of gamey lamb, applewood smoke and rosemary garlic marinade commingled and became etched into our brains. Gabrielle writes about growing up in rural Pennsylvania in a romantic, converted old silk mill, the daughter of a french ballerina, who ruled the house with an oily wooden spoon, and a set designer father, who at the yearly spring lamb roast they threw for neighbors and fancy New York friends, would slowly baste lambs from a clean metal paint can, filled with olive oil, crushed rosemary garlic and chunks of lemon. When "Blood, Bones & Butter: The Inadvertent Education of a Reluctant Chef" first came out last year, it drew praise from peers.Ĭhef Anthony Bourdain called it "simply the best memoir by a chef ever." If you're looking for a good food read, we might recommend Chef Gabrielle Hamilton's memoir, out in paperback this month.


Chef Gabrielle Hamilton (© Melissa Hamilton) Facebook Email This article is more than 11 years old.
